Against
All Odds
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I
found myself leaning forward at the wheel squinting into the gaps
left in the ice on my windshield by the worn out wipers. With
my heart pounding in fear at each icy curve of the mountain highway,
I glanced over at my son. His sixteen year old, six foot tall
lanky body was leaning rigidly forward. With terror in his voice
he repeated, " Mom, I hate this, I hate this!" Tired
from the torturous seven hour drive I had behind me, and unsure
of the road ahead as we climbed yet further up the Utah mountain
they call Soldier Pass, I snapped at him, "You are not helping!"
The darkness surrounded my little station wagon as huge tractor
trailers showered us with blinding sprays of muck and snow. My
thoughts turned to how I had gotten into this mess. In my quest
to find help for my son, born from my heart but not my body, I
had tried many treatments to ease the torment he lived with. Aspergers
syndrome engulfed his thoughts in a tunnel of isolation and repetition
like a squirrel on a wheel in his brain. We had found great healing
progress from Holding Therapy, unlocking his heart until it could
touch mine and feel the massive love I have for him. We had spent
weeks in Denver healing the ear-brain misconnection at the Center
for Inner Change with the Tomatis sound therapy. He had been to
chiropractors to realign his stiff body and nutritionists to help
heal his damaged digestive system. Now we were headed for the
Cascade Center in Orem Utah for special Neurofeedback to repair
the final sections of his wounded brain. With my body stiff from
driving and my heart filled with fear and hope, I thought back
to my decision to make this journey. I thought of another mom,
my best friend, who had made this journey many, many times with
her adopted son seeking the healing that he needed.
Bandy had worked to help her son for 13 years. Her soft, brown
doe-like eyes filled my memory. The fire of her Portuguese ancestors
had blazed in her eyes, so filled with determination months before,
when I had said, " I think it's time to give up on him. You
have done enough." I had been successfull for over 20 years
with kids who had killed. I had put myself in her place and found
it unbearable, unendurable and saw no way for her to go on. As
a young wife she had adopted this boy not knowing the agony he
would bring into her life. Given no information about his first
five weeks of life, she brought him into her home and into her
heart.
She made him a priority, as any baby should be. She stayed home
and rocked him, fed him, played with him and loved him until a
family tragedy forced her to return to work and start life as
a single mom when he was 18 months old. His behavior deteriorated
until at four years old she took him to see his first psychiatrist.
Medication and therapy seemed to ease some of his rages and destructiveness
for a time. He was diagnosed, or should I say mis-diagnosed with
ADD. She learned about parenting techniques and interventions
for kids with that condition. He continued to sink into serious
mental illness. In the next five years she sought help in vain
with eight different psychiatrists and therapists, one psychiatric
hospital stay, and six months in a residential treatment center
or him. Seven different medications were tried and failed. She
consistently followed each professional’s advice for six
months to a year before moving on to search for the answers she
had not found for her child.
I met Bandy when she signed up for one of the parenting classes
I was teaching near my home in Glenwood Springs CO. Her son had
been running away. She took his shoes to stop him. He ran with
no shoes. She took his clothes. He ran in his underwear. She took
his underwear. A new neighbor across the street called to let
Bandy know that her naked son had climbed out the window. She
shared my phone number with the distraught mother. That was a
day that changed my life. That was the day I began to learn what
unconditional love means. When he attacked her, she held him lovingly.
When I said he needs more exercise that became her daily priority.
When I taught in class about the importance of respect and responsibility
she poured her heart and soul into it. What-ever Bandy found that
would help her hurting son she would become a champion at doing.
Her dedication was met with defiance and destruction. Her hugs
and snuggles were met with urine and spit. Her loving eye contact
was met with cold, hard, killing looks of rage. Her soft loving
arms were met with his fists of fury. His self control finally
began to build. He quit attacking her and began moving toward
compliance and caring.
Bandy felt it was time to try school again. He had been too disturbed
to be with other children, hurting and molesting them. She asked
me to meet with her and the teachers before school began. I was
honored to be asked to help and support this amazing woman and
awesome mom. I explained to the two teachers about his diagnosis
of Reactive Attachment Disorder and that he was having Holding
Therapy and that Bandy was doing special therapeutic parenting
at home very successfully. The two massive male teachers sat wide
eyed and nodded as I had Jacob demonstrate "strong sitting".
This is a technique that helped him to calm himself. He proudly
walked to his “think spot” lowered himself to a cross
legged position on the rug, folded his hands in his lap and straightened
his back tall and strong. Facing the wall, he proudly demonstrated
his self control by sitting perfectly straight, still and quiet
for ten minutes. His mom announced that his time was up and gave
him a huge hug. I asked Jacob how he felt when he did strong sitting
. He politely shared that at first he was very angry and then
it helped him to feel better and calm himself. The teachers left
the meeting agreeing to the interventions I had outlined to help
this now 10 year old boy.
They
lied!
The
first time Jacob tested in class by getting a rude attitude about
a math project, the teacher proudly shared with his mom that evening
that he had sent Jacob out for an extra recess to calm him down!
The rest of the class did math while he went out to play because
he was rude! Jacob had to test to see if he could trust the teacher.
If he could outsmart, manipulate or con him, the teacher would
fail. This teacher had failed. The next test was, of course, bigger
and the next bigger until Jacob felt so unsafe he blew up. When
a child with Attachment Disorder does not feel safe they usually
take it out on the mom.
Jacob had not run away for over a year. He ran. He broke into
two houses stealing guns out of one and scattering knives throughout
the other. Bandy called me with her heart breaking and shared
with me what had happened. We called the sheriff and I asked Bandy
to come to my home to wait. Terror filled her eyes as I met her
at the door. Terror for her son! When they collected him and the
weapons we met them at the county jail. Jacob, showing no remorse,
told the deputy that he was going to kill his mother because she
was too loving! We watched them take him away and we drove off
numb and stunned.
He was out of her care and in the care of social services for
over a year. During that time he was moved from place to place
with no appropriate treatment for his condition. He was given
ineffective talk therapy and play therapy. Bandy's huge heart
was breaking as the residential treatment facilities continually
refused to listen to her, treated her like she was ignorant as
they continued to put her son in harms way. Watching her child
grow sicker at each visit was devastating for her.
Her indomitable spirit took over. She knew that with the ineffective
treatment he was receiving he could not heal. She knew that the
success rate for children with RAD was much lower after puberty
and that the clock was ticking. She knew he had tried to kill
her and she knew she loved her son! She formed a plan. She gave
up her home and moved into a small cabin to save money to get
him the needed help. She made phone calls and dove into action.
She told the facility she would be moving her son. They said he
was not ready. She said “yes, I know”, and took him
home. She doubled her efforts. She decided to have an Attachment
Therapist, Deborah Hage, do a two week intensive session of Holding
Therapy. Thousands of dollars were needed to get this treatment
for her son. As a single mom, she had no financial resources to
attain that kind of money. She signed up for 3 new credit cards
and maxed them out. She was willing to make minimum payments for
the rest of her life if it would save her boy.
The daily restraint battles the residential staff reported, due
to his daily attacks on them, diminished to only two in the first
few months he was home after his Intensive Holding therapy. The
Community Evaluation Team agreed to help with funding for relief
breaks from him with therapeutic respite. Family and friends sent
small donations and cards of support as she threw more and more
of her heart and soul into the saving of this angry child. He
quit attacking people. He quit breaking things during rages. He
began to trust her again and heal from the damage the school situation
had caused. She added a powerful nutrition program designed by
Diane Craft a skilled nutritionist with hundreds of successes
in helping kids with behavior and attention problems. Months of
work and therapy had moved him back from the animal behavior he
had been demonstrating. Would he make it all the way?
His progress stopped. It just stopped. He was not attacking anyone,
he did his chores and strong sitting but only with a lot of grumbling.
Constant arguing about everything and a negative attitude continually
plagued their relationship. A neurologist did an EEG and found
he had a silent seizure disorder that is usually genetic or from
marinating an infant in alcohol before they are born. A new Psychiatrist
and a new medication were tried.
It helped some. Then we heard about Neurofeedback. More funds
were needed, many more miles to be driven. He hated her and everything
she did for him. He hated me for helping her. He hated himself.
I said," It is enough. It is time to have a life for you."
Those brown eyes of determination blazed in mine as she said,
“ I am taking him to Utah!”
So, here I am driving in a blinding blizzard with my heart filled
with awe and amazement for this mom who would not quit, this mom,
who fought for her son and won. I picture the two of them as they
were when I drove away, arm in arm, two hearts now filled with
the love she poured out to him. The sparkle in his eyes as he
looked at his mom while she proudly shared with me the loving,
respectful way he had been helpful around their home warms my
heart as I drive on. Echos of her reports of his great progress
at school and home fill my mind. I know his future, once headed
for loneliness, poverty and probably prison, is now filled with
the promise of love and success. The immense love she carries
for her boy fills me with wonder as I follow in her love filled
path up this mountain to help mine.
Families by Design
PO Box 2812
Glenwood Springs, CO 81602
970-524-4111
ncthomas@rof.net
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